The Death of the Number One Contender | Editorial | UFC News

There once was a time where the UFC consisted of a tournament in which men fought several times in a single day, with a win advancing you to the next round and a loss sending you packing. With each win, you came one step closer to fighting for the grand prize in the form of an oversized check, a trophy, and recognition as the best fighter with the best technique.

Over the years the UFC faced political outrage and opposition from some of the most powerful men in the country and as they applied more pressure, the UFC was molded into a new sport entirely.
Now, 20 years since the first UFC event, the company is a huge, international organization that stretches its glove-clad reach to the corners of the Earth.

With this new sense of professionalism and national acceptance, the UFC is locked in to the professional athlete-contract system of signing the best in the world to compete in the Octagon. While these men improve and amass winning streaks, they are pushed into the spotlight and can eventually earn title shots with impressive performances to try and prove that they are the best in the division.

Of course, to every rule there is an exception and injuries are a common occurrence in the sport as 2012 has been the victim of countless injuries that have altered fight cards dramatically. But, with healthy fighters should come appropriate match-ups with each fighter being given the promise of timely title fights in their respective division when the time comes.
This brings me to the meat of this article; The anatomy of the title shot.

Already in 2013, there are three title fights that feature a challenger who is coming off of a loss, two of which showcase challengers who are making their debut in a new weight class at least in their UFC career. These men are Nick Diaz, Frankie Edgar, and Chael Sonnen.

Nick Diaz was the top contender some time ago back at UFC 137, a card that was tossed around and beaten down until the main and co-main events were unrecognizable as a game of musical press-conference chairs removed Diaz from a title fight and into a fight with B.J. Penn, one that would later serve as the main event after welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre was injured and forced to withdraw from the card. Diaz won that fight and went on to fight in a losing effort against Carlos Condit for the interim-welterweight title fight last February. Diaz will be coming back from over a year layoff to fight one of the most dominant champions of our time in a fight that he simply gave up the first time around. That doesn’t mean that he is in for a sure loss but with a loss, the detractors will be satisfied in knowing that he never ‘deserved’ the shot, no matter how far they have to reach to come to that conclusion. This is simply a tactic to pull up the numbers for an event even with a champion who draws some of the highest PPV numbers on a consistent basis and also with a separate challenger in Johny Hendricks who has been dynamite as of late scoring a pair of first round knockouts over top competitors and out-pointing Josh Koscheck. Instead Hendricks will fight on the same card without the promise of a title shot with a win no matter how emphatic. Hendricks is understandably upset.

Next, we have the former lightweight champion, Frankie Edgar who drops down to what many consider will become his new permanent home at 145, taking on current featherweight champion Jose Aldo in what has been dubbed by the UFC as a ‘Super Fight’ at UFC 156. While the fight is a fantastic matchup and Edgar may be walking around at a more natural weight, the fact that he earned a title shot in his featherweight debut puzzles me. Who knows how his body will react to even the slightest of weight cuts let alone fighting someone who has made the division their own in Aldo. Consecutive losses to Benson Henderson (regardless of how controversial they are) shouldn’t exactly warrant a title fight, especially in a new division. As for a challenger worthy of the shot, Erik Koch has twice been promised a title shot with Jose Aldo being forced to withdraw from both due to injury. All the while, Koch has been earning wins and currently rides into this Saturday’s UFC on FOX 7 show on a 4-fight win streak with three of those win coming by either submission or knockout.

Finally, the ‘American Gangster’ Chael Sonnen gets a light-heavyweight fight against arguably the greatest fighter on the planet in Jon Jones. The 205-pound division is no stranger to Chael Sonnen as he used to call the division home. Now, after a middleweight campaign that saw him lose to Anderson Silva twice, Sonnen has been plunged into the deep, talent-rich, light-heavyweight division only to emerge on the surface as the number one contender. In this case, unlike, the first two, Sonnen was placed in this position to save the dying reality show, The Ultimate Fighter, as he coaches against Jon Jones leading up to a title fight in April. Still, Sonnen hasn’t yet proved himself in a division where the champion holds several physical advantages over most in the UFC with a specialty in wrestling, which Sonnen has used multiple times to climb the middleweight ranks against opponents who lacked the raw talent that he possesses in the grappling department. Even if the reports of a lean, mean 240-pound Sonnen are true, that doesn’t mean he’s an instant success in a division where a large majority of the fighters walk around well into the heavyweight division limits.

Then you have the Vitor Belfort story. A man who has fought in several UFC title fights in his career and has explored several weight divisions. A September fight with Jon Jones served as a savior to a situation that desperately needed one as Belfort stepped up to fight the champion in a division that Belfort hadn’t visited since 2007. In that fight, we saw the closest thing to a legitimate Jones loss we had ever seen as an early armbar attempt damaged Jones arm (which wasn’t apparent until after the fight). Next, Belfort was matched with Michael Bisping, with Bisping being the sole recipient of a title shot with a win and Belfort being forced to ‘clear out’ the division before getting another shot at the middleweight title. Belfort dominated the fight and knocked Bisping out with a brutal head-kick. After the fight Belfort called out Jones looking for a rematch and also the removal of ‘number one contender’ Chael Sonnen not only from his scheduled title fight but also from the UFC as Belfort felt that he was next in line in what would be considered ‘champion vs. champion’.

This seemed like a somewhat legitimate argument with Belfort having a glimpse of hope in the first round of the Jones fight and also with the destruction of Michael Bisping. However, the request would fall on understandably deaf ears as the UFC will ultimately stick its plan to help draw viewers to a highly-anticipated April title fight. But even without the plan to save TUF, Belfort shouldn’t be calling out champions from other weight classes. Sure you just fought Jones but you were considered as a late replacement simply to salvage the main event. If you want another title fight, gain the weight, show your current worth in the light-heavyweight division and earn that shot with enough light-heavyweight experience in recent memory to warrant a title fight that arouses suspicion from none.

But the UFC will march along looking to make these super fights that fans want to see. And surely, I will be in front of my TV (and in attendance for Jones vs. Sonnen) during all three fights with my stomach rumbling from the nervous butterflies one gets when watching a live UFC event. The UFC will rake in money with each event and hopefully for the sake of argument, at least one of these champions is dethroned to prove that one of these challengers is worthy since coming off of a loss in their last fight even if that wasn’t the main intentions for the UFC putting these particular fights on.

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